Linguistic Joke
-
OT^2 I see Rhino Cottages got W3C-approved and Google-indexed. Was ALT all it took, or was there some META magic required too? :)
Luc Pattyn
Local announcement (Antwerp region): Lange Wapper? Neen!
I don't know. I linked to her site on two of my earlier sites, one for Rhino Office Furniture, and one photographic, and I applied for reconsideration, and I added ALT tags. So, I don't know what worked, even if onlt time. Thanks for the interest. :rose:
-
A Russian Teacher is speaking to his [Northern] English pupils: "Russian is now an unusual langauge in Europe, as a double negative is used to reinforce the negative so to say 'I'm not never doing that' in Russian means I'm really, really not doing it. In English it means I will do it in the future. No language exists where a double positive forms a negative". Billy Replies: "Aye, right."
CCC solved so far: 2 (including a Hard One!)
keefb wrote:
Billy Replies: "Aye, right."
But only if it's Scotty or Kirk that's saying it. And then, frankly, a single positive can actually mean a negative! Marc
I'm not overthinking the problem, I just felt like I needed a small, unimportant, uninteresting rant! - Martin Hart Turner
-
You guys must get real confused during sex!
¡El diablo está en mis pantalones! ¡Mire, mire! SELECT * FROM User WHERE Clue > 0 0 rows returned Save an Orange - Use the VCF! Personal 3D projects Just Say No to Web 2 Point Blow
Only when making sex with humans. :-D
The narrow specialist in the broad sense of the word is a complete idiot in the narrow sense of the word. Advertise here – minimum three posts per day are guaranteed.
-
Same construct. "I am the last person to think it will rain tomorrow", so "Its sooo given that I think it will rain tomporrow. Colloquial South African, be it Afrikaans, Bantu, or san, all recognise sarcasm and verbal irony as great sources of mirth and bonding. You get tourists here whose heads have a remarkable ability to bounce over them any joke with a humorous false gender, response, or hyperbole. A fisherman on the Cape Coast may say to a returning competitor, with a huge catch, "Iz zat all you kn doo?", where the other party, on returning from a later trip, may respond, "I so didn't want this big catch" I'm amazed that this figure of speech is actually forcing to some people. It's been around hundreds of years in a young country, must have been longer in old countries.
-
keefb wrote:
Billy Replies: "Aye, right."
But only if it's Scotty or Kirk that's saying it. And then, frankly, a single positive can actually mean a negative! Marc
I'm not overthinking the problem, I just felt like I needed a small, unimportant, uninteresting rant! - Martin Hart Turner
to summarize: - a single positive can actually mean a negative; - two positives may mean double negative; - two negatives cancel each other (but not always). so we can better stop asking yes-or-no questions? - yes - no - don't know - all of the above - none of the above - all of the above :confused:
Luc Pattyn
Local announcement (Antwerp region): Lange Wapper? Neen!
-
to summarize: - a single positive can actually mean a negative; - two positives may mean double negative; - two negatives cancel each other (but not always). so we can better stop asking yes-or-no questions? - yes - no - don't know - all of the above - none of the above - all of the above :confused:
Luc Pattyn
Local announcement (Antwerp region): Lange Wapper? Neen!
-
Only when making sex with humans. :-D
The narrow specialist in the broad sense of the word is a complete idiot in the narrow sense of the word. Advertise here – minimum three posts per day are guaranteed.
:omg: You are already confused. :-D
If the Lord God Almighty had consulted me before embarking upon the Creation, I would have recommended something simpler. -- Alfonso the Wise, 13th Century King of Castile.
This is going on my arrogant assumptions. You may have a superb reason why I'm completely wrong. -- Iain Clarke
[My articles] -
A Russian Teacher is speaking to his [Northern] English pupils: "Russian is now an unusual langauge in Europe, as a double negative is used to reinforce the negative so to say 'I'm not never doing that' in Russian means I'm really, really not doing it. In English it means I will do it in the future. No language exists where a double positive forms a negative". Billy Replies: "Aye, right."
CCC solved so far: 2 (including a Hard One!)
Two wrongs don't make a right, but three rights make a left.
m.bergman
-- For Bruce Schneier, quanta only have one state : afraid.
-
A Russian Teacher is speaking to his [Northern] English pupils: "Russian is now an unusual langauge in Europe, as a double negative is used to reinforce the negative so to say 'I'm not never doing that' in Russian means I'm really, really not doing it. In English it means I will do it in the future. No language exists where a double positive forms a negative". Billy Replies: "Aye, right."
CCC solved so far: 2 (including a Hard One!)
-
I'm not Scots but I have a friend who is and he said this the other day: Je'naekenfitamean? Good luck figuring that oot! :wtf: :)
-
Two wrongs don't make a right, but three rights make a left.
m.bergman
-- For Bruce Schneier, quanta only have one state : afraid.